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5.04 Apply Decision Making Structures. Computer Programming I. Objective/Essential Standard. Essential Standard: 5.00- Apply Programming and Conditional Logic Indicator: 5.04 Apply decision-making structures. (3%). What is a decision?.
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5.04 Apply Decision Making Structures Computer Programming I
Objective/Essential Standard Essential Standard: 5.00- Apply Programming and Conditional Logic Indicator: 5.04 Apply decision-making structures. (3%)
What is a decision? Decisions are made by humans hundreds of times a day. Computers can make simple decisions also. What are some decisions you made today so far?
Boolean Logic • Remember, from the previous section Boolean logic? (Ex: intNum = 5) • Computers use it to make decisions! • There are only two answers: TRUE or FALSE • Computers do not know about Maybe!
Decisions… Decisions • So when you got up this morning what did you do? • This is a decision. Let’s put it in computer terms. • IF the sun is out then I will walk to school
The If…Then Statement If…Then is a decision structure that executes a set of statements when a condition is true. Form: If condition Then Statements End If T
The If…Then Statement IF the sun is out (question) THEN I will walk to school. Remember the computer uses Boolean logic (T/F). So either the sun is out (true) or ANY other state (false). No maybes or in-betweens. When the question is True, the statements after THEN (and down to ENDIF) execute. They are skipped if the question is False.
IF..THEN..ELSE Statement • In Visual Studio we use the IF..THEN..ELSE statement to tell the computer we want it to make a decision. • For exampleIf a = b then c= 10Else c=13End If T F
Use of the ELSE Else is optional- if omitted and the “question” is false no action is taken. If ELSE is used, the statements after the ELSE will execute if the “question” is NOT true (Boolean FALSE)
Nested If…Then…Else Statements • If…Then…Else statement within an If…Then…Else statement is called Nested. • Example: • IfintNum = 10 Then • Me. lblMsg.text = “Ten” • Else • IfIntNum > 10 Then • Me.lblMsg.text = “More than 10” • Else • Me. lblMsg.text = “Less than 10” • EndIf • EndIf T T F F
The If…Then…ElseIf Statement An IF statement can have multiple else statements- each one a new question or condition to check. Also called an ElseIf Ladder The computer executes the statements below the first (or only) truecondition and immediately exitsthe whole statement (ignores anything below the true statements).
The If…Then…ElseIf Statement • Used to decide among three or more actions • Form: If conditionThen Statements ElseIfconditionThen Statements ElseIfconditionThen Statements … Else Statements End If • Last Else clause is optional– executes when no True above.
If…Then…ElseIf Example If a = b Then c = 10 ElseIf a > b Then c = 14 ElseIf a < b Then c = 16 Else c = 12 End If
If…Then…ElseIfExample #2 If strStudentClass= “Senior” Then lbl.Answer.Text = “Seniors - start 1 hour late Fri” ElseIfstrStudentClass = “Junior” Then lbl.Answer.Text= “Juniors - start 30 min late Fri” ElseIfstrStudentClass = “Sophomore” Then lbl.Answer.Text= “Sophomores - start on time Fri” ElseIfstrStudentClass = “Freshman” Then lbl.Answer.Text= “Freshmen - start 15 min early Fri” End If
Select Case Decision Another way to make a decision is a select case statement. This statement is used instead of multiple else if statements. The computer again executes the first (or only) true statement and ignores the rest of the statement.
Select Case Decision Decision structure that uses the result of an expression to determine which block of code to execute. Form Example Select Caseexpression Select Case intScore CasevalueCase 0,10 Statements Statements … … Case Else Case Else Statements Statements End Select End Case
Select Case • Expression must evaluate to a built-in data type. • Integer, Double, Character, String… • There can be multiple Case clauses. • Case Else clause is optional • Value type should match the expression type and can be • a single value, • Case 2 • a list separated by commas, or • Case 1, 2, 3 • a range separated by the keyword To. • Case 1 To 5
Case Is • Compares the result of an expression to a range of values when a relational operator is part of the value. • Must use Case Is with relational operators. • Example: CaseIs< 10
Select Case Example Select CaseintGrades Case100 strGrade= “A+” Case 90 To 99 strGrade= “A” Case 80 To 89 strGrade=“B” Case 70 To 79 strGrade=“C” Case 60 To 69 strGrade=“D” CaseIs < 60 strGrade=“F” Else Messagebox.show(“Please input a valid number!”) End Select
If..Then vs. Select Case • In most cases If..Thenis good for a single decision and a Select Case(or If Elseif) is correct to use when there are multiple possible answers with only one correct answer. • In the following example, remember the .Checked property of a radiobutton holds the values True or False! • A statement such as AddMachine() is a block of code called a Function/Method that runs when its name is executed (like the Convert.ToDouble(..) Function). • We will be writing them soon!
Which Radio Button is Clicked? Select Case True CaseradAdd.Checked AddMachine() CaseradMultiply.Checked MultipleMachine() CaseradDivision.Checked DivisionMachine() Case Else Messagebox.Show(“Pick a button!”) End Select
Sample Program Write a program that allows the user to input a number. The computer should tell the user if that number is smaller, greater or equal to 15.
Sample Program Solution Private Sub btnSubmit_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles btnSubmit.Click Dim number As Integer Try number = Convert.ToInt32(txtNumber.Text) If number = 15 Then MessageBox.Show("The number is 15") ElseIf number < 15 Then MessageBox.Show("The number is less than 15") ElseIf number > 15 Then MessageBox.Show("The number is greater than 15") End If Catch ex As Exception MessageBox.Show(“Enter a numeric value”) End Try End Sub
Logical Operators Logical Operators are used to create compound Boolean expressions. Use logical operators And or Or to form a Boolean expression. Logical operators join two expressions to create an expression that evaluates to either True or False. Third operator is Not. The order of precedence is Not, then And, then Or.
CompoundBoolean Expressions Use to check multiple values in a single statement. Compound expressions resolve to a single True or False. For example: If intNum1 = 15 AndintNum2 > 2 ThenstatementsEnd If
Compound Boolean Expressions - AND • T AND T evaluates to T • T AND F evaluates to F • When using Andor&with IF, both (all) conditions MUST be true for the entire IF (or else if) question to evaluate to true. If number < 15 & number > 5 Then … • If the number is not less than 15 AND greater than 5 this statement is false.
Compound Boolean Expressions - OR • If number < 15 Ornumber > 5 ThenStatementsEnd If • Now if any one of the conditions are true, the statement evaluates to true. • T Or F evaluates to T • A truth table shows the possible outcomes of the Boolean Expressions.
And Truth Table Expression1 And Expression2
Or Truth Table Expression1 Or Expression2
Short Circuiting • VB provides a way to “short circuit” long compound IF statements. • The computer looks at the first statement and uses that information to decide if it needs to look at the rest of the statement. • AndAlsoIf intNum1 > 0 AndAlso intNum2 > 0 Then • So if inNum1 is not greater than 0 the first Boolean expression is false and the computer does not waste time looking at num2. • OrElseIf intNum1 > 0 OrElse intNum2 > 0 Then • If intNum1 is greater than 0 there is no need to check intNum2 because the first Boolean expression is true.
Using IF in Assignment Statements • An IF can also be used in assignment statements to set the value of a variable. • Example: Dim varName As Data Type = If(comparison, value if true, value if false) • Example: 'Assign a value to the string strName based on the comparison given. Dim strName As String = If(a < b, "Less than 10", "Greater than 10")
Randomizing a Number • To generate a random integer, we can use the System Random class. • First create your Random Number GeneratorDimgenAsNew System.Random() • You create the name (gen, numGen,…) to match the purpose of the generator. • Use the next or nextDouble methods to generate the random numbers.
Randomizing a Number • NextDouble • Returns a random number between 0.0 and 1.0. • Example:dblRndNum = gen.NextDouble • Generates a number between 0.0 and up to, but not including 1.0+ • Next • Returns a nonnegative random number between 0 and the MaxValue (2,147,483,647) • Example:intRndNum= gen.Next • Generates a number between 0 and up to, but not including 2,147,483,647
Randomizing a Number • Next (Int32) • Returns a nonnegative random number less than the specified maximum • Example:intRndNum = gen.Next(10) • Generates a number between 0 and up to (but not including) 10 • Next (Int32, Int32) • Returns a random number within a specified range • Example:intRndNum = gen.Next(0, 50) • Generates a number between 0 and up to (but not including) 50
Vocabulary & Code Logical Operators Compound Boolean Expression Truth Table Short Circuiting If..Then If..Then..Else If..Then..ElseIf Select..Case If..AndAlso If..OrElse
Conclusion • This PowerPoint provided an overview of decision making statements in Visual Studio. • For more information on Decision Statements • http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/752y8abs(v=vs.100).aspx • http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cy37t14y(v=vs.100).aspx • For more information on Random • http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.random.aspx